I notice, however, that Novell filed its motion to compel [PDF] and memo in support [PDF] and Declaration of Kenneth W. Brakebill [PDF] with exhibits on November 7th, and only after that did SCO turn over 35 deposition transcripts on November 16, then on November 21 another 22. And then on the next day, they turned over 1,047 exhibits for the responsive transcripts. SCO, if you do its math, admits to having turned over only 6 transcripts prior to Novell's motion being filed. Novell in its motion said SCO had turned over "transcripts (and partial, in some cases) from only five of the approximately eighty-two SCO v. IBM deponents."

So now you know why lawyers file motions to compel. If SCO is in compliance -- and I doubt Novell agrees it is, since footnotes in SCO's filing list some transcripts it didn't turn over and my calculations show approximately twenty deponents not yet accounted for -- it's only because of a sudden scurrying about this month to try to look compliant for the purposes of this motion.

SCO says it's still reviewing the rest of the transcripts in the IBM case, but they don't seem to them to be relevant, but if they've overlooked something, why SCO will naturally turn it over as soon as they realize it. The problem they face is that Novell in its motion asked for *all* transcripts and exhibits from SCO v. IBM and it requested that "SCO should also be compelled to describe, on a transcript by transcript basis, why any withheld transcripts do not reasonably relate to a claim or defense in this litigation."

Ah, definitions of terms on the horizon. What is relevant? SCO hopes the court will notice their wonderful compliance and trust them to know what is and isn't relevant. The problem SCO has is Judge Brooke Wells has just been assigned as the magistrate judge in this case too, not just in SCO v. IBM, and SCO represented to her that SCO was in full compliance on all discovery orders in that case, and she strongly disagreed, writing in her June order, "In the view of the court it is almost like SCO sought to hide its case until the ninth inning in hopes of gaining an unfair advantage despite being repeatedly told to put 'all evidence . . . on the table'." So there's some water under the bridge here, and there are no more virgins involved. Everyone has watched SCO's discovery machinations for three years in SCO v. IBM, so if SCO is sounding nervous, they have every rational reason to be.

Also, there is something odd. SCO says that it has now turned over 66 deposition transcripts and the 1,047 associated exhibits since Novell's motion was filed. But it also says that it has turned over a total of 1,095 exhibits, and a footnote mentions some 600 exhibits attached to motions they also turned over to Novell. I would think, though, that most of those would be available to Novell from Pacer, as they are to the general public. Some might be sealed, but surely not all 600. In any case, you can see, no matter how you do the math, that SCO didn't turn over the bulk of what it has now delivered to Novell until after Novell filed the motion to compel.

So why the hurried compliance? I'm just guessing, but my feel is that somebody was delaying, probably because there is something they'd rather not turn over at all, and after they got hit with the motion to compel and that horrifying request for a breakdown of reasons why any withheld items are not relevant, somebody did some research and found out that the way to turn back such a request is to show yourself compliant and eager to do the right thing. So, 180 turnaround, and here's the compliant version of SCO. Novell has been watching too, of course, and it may not be willing to take SCO's word for a blessed thing. You think?

SCO'S MEMORANDUM IN
OPPOSITION TO NOVELL'S
EXPEDITED MOTION TO COMPEL
PRODUCTION OF DEPOSITION
TRANSCRIPTS AND EXHIBITS
FROM SCO V. IBM

Case No. 2:04CV00139

Honorable Dale A. Kimball

Magistrate Judge Brooke C. Wells

Plaintiff, The SCO Group, Inc. ("SCO"), respectfully submits this memorandum in
opposition to Novell's Expedited Motion to Compel the Production of Transcripts and Exhibits
from SCO v. IBM.

INTRODUCTION

Novell's Motion is based on the unfounded and incorrect suspicion that SCO would not
produce certain documents in discovery. Novell seeks deposition transcripts and exhibits from
the IBM Litigation that are reasonably related to the claims and defenses in this case. Novell
filed the Motion despite SCO's assurances that it would produce the documents in time for
Novell to use them in fact depositions. SCO has done just that: SCO produced the documents
over two months before the discovery deadline and before the parties have even scheduled any
depositions. Indeed, SCO has exceeded its obligations by producing the documents in their
entirety, without redacting the vast portions of unresponsive testimony or withholding or
redacting the corresponding exhibits. If not withdrawn, as it should be, the Motion should be
denied for lack of anything to compel.

STATEMENT OF FACTS

On December 6, 2005, the parties entered into a Scheduling Order and Order Vacating
Hearing in which SCO authorized "Novell to have attorneys-eyes only access to those
confidential materials in the SCO v. IBM case, including document productions, depositions,
under-seal briefings, and discovery responses, that reasonably relate to a claim or defense in this
litigation." (Ex. 1 ¶ 2.l.) Later that month, Novell served upon SCO forty-five (45) document
requests, including a request seeking relevant materials from the IBM Litigation.

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In January 2006, SCO produced over half a million pages of materials responsive to those
requests. On February 8 and 9, SCO resent those materials to Novell in a different format, per
Novell's request, along with additional supplemental materials SCO had produced to IBM in the
interim. Also on February 8, counsel for IBM consented to the production to Novell of
confidential transcripts and other documents from the IBM Litigation. Shortly thereafter, SCO
started review of responsive deposition transcripts, and by March 30, had produced to Novell at
least nine transcripts containing the most extensive responsive testimony.

On April 10, Novell filed its motion to stay SCO's claims. On August 21, the Court
granted and denied that motion in part. On September 29, Novell filed its pending motion for
summary judgment or preliminary injunction. On October 4, SCO moved for an extension of the
time to respond to that motion and for an extension of the discovery deadline. On October 24,
the Court extended the discovery deadline to February 1, 2007, based in part on the finding that
"both parties undoubtedly delayed their discovery efforts during the pendency of Novell's
motion to stay pending the SuSE arbitration."

On October 11, while SCO's October 4 motion was pending, counsel for Novell
complained to counsel for SCO that "SCO has produced just five depositions from the IBM case
and Novell is prepared to compel, if necessary." (Ex. 2.) On November 2, having explained
SCO's continuing efforts to respond to IBM's six pending motions for summary judgment, SCO
informed Novell that "SCO will produce those transcripts, or where appropriate portions of
transcripts, from the SCO v. IBM case containing testimony that reasonably relates to claims or
defenses in the SCO v. Novell case." (Ex. 3.) Counsel for SCO further assured counsel for
Novell that SCO "will begin a rolling production of such transcripts or portions of transcripts as

3

soon as practicable, and in time to permit the use of the material for fact depositions in this
matter." (Id) Despite these assurances, Novell filed this Motion on November 7.

On November 11, having obtained two weeks of additional time to respond, SCO filed its
memoranda in opposition to IBM's six motions for summary judgment in the IBM Litigation.
SCO's filing comprised over 900 pages of briefing and almost 400 exhibits1 comprising more
than 10,000 pages. On November 16, SCO produced that filing in its entirety to Novell,
including thirty-five (35) additional deposition transcripts responsive to Novell's request for such
materials. On November 21, SCO produced twenty-two (22) additional deposition transcripts.
On November 22, SCO produced the exhibits for all the responsive transcripts, a total of 1,047
exhibits of the approximately 1,950 deposition exhibits in the IBM Litigation.

In all, after a detailed, thorough, and reasonable review of deposition testimony from the
IBM Litigation, SCO has produced sixty-six (66) deposition transcripts and the 1,047 associated
exhibits. Even though many of the transcripts consist almost entirely of unresponsive testimony,
SCO has produced all sixty-six transcripts in un-redacted form and has not withheld or redacted
any exhibits corresponding to unresponsive testimony.2Although SCO will undertake an even
more detailed review in the next two weeks, the other transcripts do not appear to contain any
material that relates to any claim or defense in this case. Novell made its most recent production
to SCO on November 18, 2006.

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ARGUMENT

The Court should deny Novell's Motion, if not withdrawn, because SCO has timely
produced the documents that Novell seeks through the Motion.

I. SCO HAS PRODUCED ALL RESPONSIVE MATERIALS.

As of November 22, 2006, SCO has identified and produced all the deposition transcripts
from the IBM Litigation containing testimony reasonably related to the claims and defenses in
this case. As of the same date, SCO has also produced all the exhibits associated with those
transcripts. SCO has never refused to produce such documents and, in the event that SCO has
inadvertently overlooked any responsive document, notwithstanding its detailed review to date,
SCO will promptly supplement its production. There is nothing for the Court to compel.

Novell argues (at 1) that it anticipates that SCO will not produce all the documents
because of the timing of its production. This argument fails for at least two reasons.

First, SCO did not delay in producing the documents. In February 2006, SCO promptly
produced over half a million pages of materials, comprising most of the materials it had
produced in the IBM Litigation to that point. SCO then started to review and produce deposition
transcripts, and by March 30, had produced at least nine transcripts containing the most extensive
responsive testimony. These transcripts include, for example, the deposition of Ed Chatlos, who
was the lead negotiator for Novell in the 1995 transaction reflected in the APA, and who
confirmed in his deposition that Novell sold its entire UNIX business, including the copyrights,
to the Santa Cruz Operation. As the Court found in its Order extending the discovery deadline,
the parties then delayed discovery during the pendency of Novell's motion to stay.
Subsequently, during the meet and confer that preceded this Motion, counsel for SCO assured

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counsel for Novell that SCO would produce the documents in time for their use in fact
depositions that is, well before that end of discovery. Indeed, while SCO has produced all the
documents, the parties have not even scheduled any fact depositions.

Second, even if SCO had delayed, there is no connection between the timing and the
sufficiency of the production. Novell argues (at 1) that SCO's offer to begin producing the
documents on a rolling basis as soon as practicable is "no more than a vague promise to execute
on some portion" of SCO's obligations even though the offer included the assurance that the
documents would be produced in time for fact depositions. SCO voluntarily agreed to produce
the documents, has never backed down from that agreement, and has now produced them.
Novell cannot impute any insufficiency to the production due to timing.

II. NOVELL ALSO SEEKS UNREASONABLE AND UNNECESSARY RELIEF.

Novell also contends (at 6-7) that SCO should be compelled to explain "on a transcript by
transcript basis" the reasons it has not produced deposition transcripts and exhibits from the IBM
Litigation. Novell believes that relief is necessary "given SCO's apparent overly narrow view of
what is relevant" and "in order to ensure that SCO does not continue to apply an overly narrow
view of `relevant.'" Novell's argument fails for at least the following reasons.

First, SCO has not adopted a narrow view of relevance. On the contrary, SCO has:

voluntarily agreed to produce the documents, as Novell underscores in its brief;

not objected to IBM's request for documents in the IBM litigation reasonably relating
to claims and defenses in this case;

never refused to produce the documents or otherwise suggested that it would withhold
them;

in fact produced the sixty-six (66) responsive transcripts and the associated exhibits
after a reasonable review of the deposition testimony from the IBM Litigation; and

6

produced all sixty-six transcripts without redacting unresponsive testimony or
withholding or redacting the exhibits corresponding to that testimony, even though
many of those transcripts consist almost entirely of unresponsive testimony.

SCO's production, moreover, includes nineteen (19) of the twenty-four (24) transcripts of the
deponents Novell identifies (at 4-6) by name.3Other than Novell's unfounded suspicion that the
timing of SCO's production somehow reveals its view of relevance, there is no basis whatsoever
for Novell's supposition that SCO has adopted a narrow view. In light of SCO's extensive
production, and its representation that it has produced all the documents after a reasonable
review, the relief Novell seeks is simply unnecessary.4

Second, Novell does not cite any authority for the relief it seeks. Nothing in the Federal
Rules requires a litigant who has produced documents without objection, and in addition
represents that its production is responsive and complete, to explain why it did not produce each
of the documents it withheld. Implicit in those representations is the representation that withheld
documents are not responsive.

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CONCLUSION

SCO respectfully submits, for the foregoing reasons, that if the Motion is not withdrawn,
the Court should deny Novell's Expedited Motion to Compel Production of Deposition
Transcripts and Exhibits from SCO v. IBM.

1These exhibits were in addition to the 600 exhibits that IBM submitted with its motions, many of
which SCO referenced in its opposition papers.

2SCO has produced the documents expressly without conceding that all of the material produced
relates to any claim or defense in this case. See, e.g., Letter from E. Normand to K. Brakebill, dated
November 16, 2006; Letter from S. Bach to K. Brakebill, dated November 21, 2006; Letter from E.
Normand to K. Brakebill, dated November 22, 2006. (Exs. 4-6.)

3
SCO has not produced the transcripts for a Rule 30(b)(6) deposition of each William Broderick,
Jeff Hunsaker, and Chris Sontag, because the transcripts do not contain responsive testimony. For the
same reason, SCO also has not produced the transcript of the May 12, 2004, deposition of Michael Olson
and the transcript of the deposition of Blake Stowell. On the other hand, with respect to these deponents,
SCO has produced the transcripts of three depositions of Mr. Broderick, two depositions of Mr. Hunsaker,
two depositions of Mr. Olson, and four depositions of Mr. Sontag.

4
It is Novell that has by its own words adopted a narrow view of relevance in this case. For
example, SCO's Document Requests Nos. 23-26 seek documents concerning rights under Section 4.16 of
the APA with respect to UNIX license agreements. Though the parties' respective treatment of such
agreements would clearly evidence their respective rights under that provision, Novell has objected "to
this Request as irrelevant to the extent that it seeks documents not related to the specific UNIX license
agreements at issue in the specific claims and defenses in this lawsuit." (Novell's Responses and
Objections to SCO's First Set of Requests for Production, dated Feb. 10, 2006, at 14-16 (Ex. 7).) SCO is
conferring with Novell on this and several other similar issues.

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CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE

Plaintiff/Counterclaim Defendant, The SCO Group, Inc., hereby certifies that a true and
correct copy of the foregoing SCO's Memorandum in Opposition to Novell's Expedited Motion
to Compel Production of Deposition Transcripts and Exhibits from SCO v. IBM was served on
Defendant, Novell, Inc., on the 27th day of November, 2006, by CM/ECF to the following: